Three Ways to Cut Live Video Monitoring Costs

Advanced, real-time video surveillance is a critical part of protecting the public. When an incident occurs on a bus, live video monitoring lets you see what’s happening immediately, and enables you to share that video with police or other emergency personnel.

Most transportation agencies, however, don’t have an unlimited budget to live stream high resolution megapixel images to their command center. Streaming 1080p video over a 4G LTE network, for example, can be costly, especially when multiplied over hundreds of buses, each with multiple surveillance cameras.

So how can transportation agencies maintain regular live access to their mobile surveillance cameras without incurring a massive expense? Here’s some advice on managing mobile bandwidth consumption.

Pre-program your IP cameras

One of the most effective ways to reduce your bandwidth is to pre-program your IP surveillance cameras based on activity level. This takes a bit of time, but it’s well worth the effort. There’s no sense in capturing 1080p images inside of an empty bus, so do a thorough review of your agency’s surveillance needs. When do you absolutely need 720p or 1080p images? And when will a 2CIF or 4CIF image suffice? Remember that the amount of activity the cameras are capturing affects the bit rate, so consider the complexity of your scenes. You can maximize your bandwidth by programming your IP cameras to record at the right bit rates for your fleet’s activity levels.

For example:

During low activity times when you’re capturing mainly static scenes, recording a 2CIF resolution image at 15 fps would result in a camera bit rate of 0.11 Mbps. Capturing the same scene in 1080p at 30 fps would result in a camera bit rate of approximately 2.4 Mbps, more than 20 times the bandwidth of the 2CIF image

During medium activity level times (in between peak hours, for example, when your buses are making frequent stops and passengers are getting on and off) your cameras are consuming more bandwidth. A 2CIF image captured at 15 fps would result in a camera bit rate of 0.33 Mbps. A 4CIF image, also captured at 15 fps, would result in bit rate of 0.55 Mbps. And a 1080p image, also captured at 15 fps, would result in 3.78 Mbps.

During your highest activity, you will be consuming the most bandwidth because the cameras are capturing complex scenes. In these cases, a 2CIF image captured at 15 fps results in a camera bit of 0.72 Mbps. A 4CIF image captured at 15 fps results in a camera bit rate of 1.22 Mbps, while a 1080p image, also captured at 15fps, results in 8.25 Mbps.

Understanding the impact your frame rates have on bandwidth consumption during low, medium and high activity periods is key, and sets you up well for the next step in this process.

Strike the right balance

The key here is to find the best balance between image quality and bandwidth consumed. You don’t want to incur bandwidth costs to view high resolution images of empty buses, but you also don’t want grainy, pixelated images when you are trying to decipher important details.

The best approach is to test a few, different resolutions and frame rates at different times to find the right balance.

Remember, the numbers cited above are examples, and factors like the position of your surveillance cameras, the lighting inside your buses, and the type of scenes captured all play a part in bandwidth consumption.

Take advantage of alternate stream recording

Once you have determined the best bit rates to use throughout the day, you may be asking yourself: “What if an incident occurs on a bus at a time when I’ve programmed my cameras to capture only 2CIF images?”

The answer, of course, is to use alternate stream recording. Use the low resolution stream for live viewing, and then record a higher resolution stream to your network video recorder. This gives your command center the ability to see into buses as needed using much less bandwidth, and still ensures that the system is capturing high quality, evidentiary video that you can pull later for forensic analysis should an incident occur.